One of the most powerful aspects of ketamine-assisted psychotherapy is that it does far more than reduce symptoms.
At its best, it creates the conditions for deep relational healing, attachment repair, and genuine personal transformation.
In my conversation with Gita Vaid, MD, what stands out most is her extraordinary ability to articulate the complexity of the psychedelic psychotherapy process. As a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and co-founder of the Center for Natural Intelligence, Gita brings a deeply relational and process-oriented lens to ketamine work.
What emerges from this conversation is a clear reminder:
psychedelic therapy is not passive
it is a living, relational process
One of Gita’s core insights is that healing happens through the relationship itself.
While ketamine opens access to deeper emotional states, the medicine alone is not the treatment. The therapeutic relationship becomes the crucible where:
This is especially important for people whose early relational environments shaped survival-based ways of being.
As Gita describes it, two people can live through similar events, but their attachment history changes how deeply the trauma lands. The earlier relational matrix matters.
This is why psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy is so powerful:
it allows us to work not only with the event, but with the attachment system that received the event.
A theme I deeply resonate with is Gita’s emphasis on trusting the unfolding process.
Early in the field, many clinicians understandably rely on protocols, steps, and carefully structured frameworks.
Over time, deeper skill often means becoming less rigid and more capable of truly listening.
Gita describes this shift beautifully:
the work becomes less about applying a “fancy” protocol and more about learning how to follow the person’s own healing intelligence.
This means:
This mirrors what many of us discover clinically:
often the most challenging sessions are the ones where the deepest healing is happening.
One of the most clinically rich moments in this conversation is Gita’s case example of a long-term therapy client who enters ketamine work.
During the session, the client unexpectedly asks for:
At first glance, this might look like withdrawal.
But what is actually happening is profound:
the client is discovering and expressing authentic boundaries for the first time.
A lifelong pattern of pleasing and enmeshment begins reorganizing in the present moment.
The ketamine session becomes a live attachment repair experience where the client safely says:
- this is what I need
- this is how I want to be with you
- this is where I end and you begin
That is not avoidance.
That is healing.
And over time, as internal safety grows, the client becomes more able to re-enter shared relational space with flexibility rather than fear.
One of the most important pivots in psychedelic psychotherapy is the shift from trauma processing into flourishing.
As Gita names so clearly, people often become deeply attached to identities built around suffering:
But once enough healing has happened, a new question emerges:
How much goodness can you tolerate?
This is where the work becomes surprisingly challenging.
Many clients can process pain more easily than they can receive joy, freedom, confidence, or relational ease.
The deeper therapeutic task becomes helping them feel safe:
This is one of the most meaningful state shifts ketamine work can support:
discovering what it feels like to be yourself outside survival mode.
This conversation also offers a powerful message for clinicians.
A good psychedelic training is not only about:
Those matter.
But the deeper preparation is self-development.
Gita speaks to something I believe is absolutely true:
nothing prepares a therapist for deep psychedelic process work more than doing their own inner work.
To support unfolding transformation in another person, we must understand unfolding from the inside.
That means:
This work asks more of us than technique.
It asks for maturity, humility, and emotional depth.
A final thread I love in this conversation is Gita’s commitment to innovation.
Her recent work explores how music itself can become a psychotherapeutic model—not just background support, but an intentional clinical intervention shaped by different theories of mind and healing.
This points toward something larger.
The field is still too often trying to fit psychedelic work into old psychotherapy paradigms.
What this moment asks of us is the courage to develop a new clinical language and a new healing paradigm—one that honors:
This is where the future of the field is headed.
What I love most about this conversation is its reminder that psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy is not simply about symptom reduction.
It is about helping people discover:
- What is it like to be myself when I am no longer in survival mode?
For many clients, that is an entirely new experience.
And for us as clinicians, our work is to help create the safety, relational depth, and therapeutic container where that discovery becomes possible.
That is where ketamine-assisted psychotherapy moves beyond treatment and into transformation.